joeylittle
Sponsor
Anxiety doesn't respond well to logic, does it? I really think it's all about re-training the body; once your mind has set off alarm bells, your body will always respond in the very unhelpful ways. Of course there are the big responses (panic attacks) but even accelerated heartbeat makes stress rise. I'm trying to be really diligent about going right into a 4x4 breathing technique as soon as anything that has the capacity to make me anxious presents itself.
I'm not always as disciplined about it as I need to be, but for me it's the other component besides cognitive that really makes a difference. When I keep my breathing regulated its just not possible for me to spin off into anxiety-land; there have been times when I've felt like I didn't even begin to get anxious - I assumed I might, and I went for the breathing and then the cognitive adjustments (this is just a thought, thoughts pass, avoid judgements, wise mind, etc) - and actually nothing happened at all! I wish that was every time, but that's what practice is for.
I know I can't always control my mind, but if I get on top of it right away, I can control my body, with practice. And a relaxed body really supports having a relaxed mind.
Hope this helps! Don't beat yourself up - it's not true, first, and second, its counterproductive.
I don't think anyone can learn not to be anxious; I think anyone can learn how to maintain a relaxed, mindful state where things that could be anxiety-causing pass right along the same as things that are neutral.
I'm not always as disciplined about it as I need to be, but for me it's the other component besides cognitive that really makes a difference. When I keep my breathing regulated its just not possible for me to spin off into anxiety-land; there have been times when I've felt like I didn't even begin to get anxious - I assumed I might, and I went for the breathing and then the cognitive adjustments (this is just a thought, thoughts pass, avoid judgements, wise mind, etc) - and actually nothing happened at all! I wish that was every time, but that's what practice is for.
I know I can't always control my mind, but if I get on top of it right away, I can control my body, with practice. And a relaxed body really supports having a relaxed mind.
Hope this helps! Don't beat yourself up - it's not true, first, and second, its counterproductive.
I don't think anyone can learn not to be anxious; I think anyone can learn how to maintain a relaxed, mindful state where things that could be anxiety-causing pass right along the same as things that are neutral.